As long as your employer is reporting you wages to the goverment they can garnish them.
Generally, if the car is jointly owned, a creditor may be able to go after the co-owner's interest in the vehicle. However, laws vary by jurisdiction and the specific circumstances of the case can also impact how the creditor can pursue the debt. It is advisable to consult with a legal professional for guidance on this matter.
Yes. Both are equally responsible for paying off the debt.
Include the original account number if you are including the original creditor. Include the account number for the collection agency if you do not have the orignal creditor information and are including them as "Care Of" for service.
A divorce decree cannot alter the rights of the original creditor. The court can decided who gets the asset, but the both spouses remain liabile to the creditor.
you have danger in both places you can meet friends in both places you can trade things in both places
No. Not unless the creditor can prove the debt was for items you both used.
Both and anyone else you can think about in the middle, because it removes any claims down the road for not providing proper notice.
Mediations means you work out what you are going to pay them. So their advantage is that you are going to pay them less than you owe, but not file bankruptcy which would leave them with nearly nothing. The advantages to the creditor of debt mediation allows both the creditor and debtor to resolve the debt or judgment rapidly, which avoids undue delay and costs to both parties. It can be applied to our current foreclosure crisis.
Yes. Unless there is a court order prohibiting contact, anyone can contact you.
there have been people on both places
If you have an account with a creditor that is seriously delinquent, the creditor may agree to a debt settlement to pay off the account in full. You may approach the creditor with an offer yourself, or you may work with a professional debt settlement agency. Both methods have advantages and disadvantages that are worth researching ahead of time. If your creditor accepts the settlement, you only have to pay the agreed-upon percentage of the debt.
They can't be both. They can either be the executor of the will (carrying out the wishes of the deceased) - or a creditor (being owed money by the deceased). If they act as both - there could be a conflict of interest (and accusations of theft or fraud). The's far easier to have an independent person to act as an executor - then they don't have any financial interest in the deceased's will.